Taken from the classic Nintendo 64 video game, GoldenEye 007, the design mirrors that of double-0 agent James Bond's in-game gadget that let you read mission files, check your health and body armor, detonate explosives, and employ a bolt-blasting laser. The smartwatch face carries over colored tiles, though instead of monitoring how close you are to termination, the meter will reflect the device's depleting battery life.

Smartwatch software can only improve from its rather rudimentary beginnings. As device and operating system makers like Google hand developers more tools through application programming interfaces (APIs), the smartwatch app marketplace will grow to include more of the fun hacks that the device makers don't think up themselves. Though smartwatches may never be as robust a playground for developers as smartphone have been, clever interface designs and neat tricks that give us the ability to customize and tinker with our smartwatches will only continue to blossom over the coming months.

The Bond watch face, designed by Rmuk Apps, was originally designed with round displays in mind, but hit the Google Play store prior to the release of the Moto 360. Now that Android Wear, Google's wearable-centric mobile operating system, is running on a circular device, we're finally able to see the Secret Agent Watchface on a screen that can accommodate the interface.

Even though it looks appropriate on the Moto 360, the Bond watch face may in fact be better suited to LG's G Watch R. LG announced its very own circular smartwatch, due out later this year, last week at the IFA 2014 show in Berlin.

That device contains a more traditional watch design, with a standard tachymeter measurement ring along the edge of its face, that more closely matches up with the one Bond sports in GoldenEye 007. Check out the in-game version below in all of its 64-bit glory: